South Korea’s Jang Ha-na overcame waterlogged conditions and a marathon final day to clinch her first LPGA Tour title, a two-shot triumph at the Coates Golf Championship in Ocala, Florida, on Saturday.
An emotional Jang burst into tears after rolling in a birdie at the par-five 18th at the Golden Ocala Golf and Equestrian Club to finally close the deal after four runner-up finishes last year.
Jang admitted after that her inability to break through had been “heartbreaking” as she had watched so many of her South Korean friends win LPGA Tour events.
“It’s been affecting me the way I play because they’re competitors and they’re good friends,” the 23-year-old told reporters after hugging her Australian caddie Graham Courts and her father, among others, as tears streamed down her face.
“I put a lot of pressure on myself, but I worked very hard, so finally I got there and have the win. From now on, I’m going to be able to relax a little bit more, focus more on upcoming tournaments,” she said.
Jang did not make a birdie in the final round until the 16th, where her patience was rewarded when she rolled in a five-footer to edge ahead.
She carded a 72 to finish at 11-under 277, two better than Canadian teenager Brooke Henderson (72) and three in front of world No. 1 Lydia Ko (75), US Women’s Open champion Chun In-gee (70) and South Korean Kim Sei-young (71).
Kaohsiung-born Candie Kung finished tied for 16th place on four-under after a 72, Min Lee was tied for 40th on one-over after a 70 and fellow Taiwanese Yani Tseng was tied for 60th on five-over after a 75.
Jang had to play 30 holes after resuming her third round at the crack of dawn and conditions deteriorated in the afternoon as steady rain left parts of the course under water, prompting staff to use leaf blowers to clear puddles from the greens.
Jang’s hopes seemed to have submerged when she three-putted the 14th, missing a three-footer after getting too aggressive with her first putt, but that was the South Korean’s final mistake.
Meanwhile, Henderson three-putted the 17th and then gave herself little chance of a birdie at the last after flirting with a hazard with her second shot and leaving her third about 90 feet from the hole, but a par was enough to clinch second place for the 18-year-old, who became the third-youngest LPGA Tour winner when she won the Portland Classic by eight shots in August last year.
Ko started the day tied with Jang and they remained locked together after the third round, but the New Zealander dropped six shots in the first 13 holes of the final round, before steadying what had been a sinking ship with three consecutive birdies from the 15th.
Additional reporting by staff writer
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